Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1807778 Magnetic Resonance Imaging 2007 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

Xenon porometry is a novel method used for characterizing porous materials by the 129Xe nuclear magnetic resonance of xenon gas. With the method, the diffusion of gas is slowed down by immersing the material in a medium, which can be in liquid or solid state during measurements. Because of slow diffusion, the signal of a xenon atom is characteristic of the properties of only one pore, and the composite signal of all atoms represents the distribution of properties. The method is especially applicable for determining pore size distribution because the chemical shifts of two different xenon signals (one from liquid and the other from gas pockets in solid) are dependent on pore size. Therefore, the shapes of these signals represent pore size distribution function. In addition, the porosity of the material can be determined by comparing the intensities of two signals. This article focuses on describing xenon signals observed from gas pockets in a solid medium, which has turned out to be most convenient for pore size determination.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
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